Sie sind auf Seite 1von 52

FATAWA ON INSURANCE

I. IS INSURANCE PERMISSIBLE? LIFE, CAR, HEALTH,


PROPERTY, HAZARDS, SHIPPING, ETC.

SUBJECT: Is insurance permissible?

To: islam-online.net
Date: 7/9/00

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br.
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
In the circles of contemporary Shari'ah scholars, there are three opinions about Life
insurance, and for that matter all types of insurance too. They all recognize that it is a
new contract not known in the history of Fiqh. A minority considers it Haram and it
recruits all kinds of argument against it including Riba, gambling, Gharar and speculation
on the will of Allah. This view does not carry much weight.
The second view is that it contains Gharar because no one knows whether the liability of
the insurer (the company) will ever materialize nor when it will, if ever. This is a serious
Gharar that lead to a major defect in the contract. It is therefore forbidden, (more to come
on this opinion).
The third opinion is presented by the late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka, until his death last
July he was the uncontested most knowledgeable Shari'ah scholar. Le argued that the
Gharar in the contract is remedied by the fact that it is a contract based on overwhelming
statistical knowledge and the application of the theory of probability. With this in mind
there is no Gharar on the part of the insurer. And the contract is permissible with 2
conditions that it contains no Riba clause and that its subject (insured thing) be
legitimate. These 2 conditions rule out regular fixed - return life insurance because the
value of the policy is the outcome of investment premiums at a compounded rate of
interest, (while variable - return life is permissible if the funds are invested in Shari’ah
approved stocks or mutual funds). They also rule out insuring a prohibited activity such
as casinos of legs of belly dancers.
The advocates of the second opinion argue that the Gharar problem applies only in
exchange contracts. If the contract is modified and restructure on the basis of cooperation
or mutuality, where there will be an association of the insured instead of a profit
motivated insurer company, the Gharar is then tolerated. This is so because the relation
between the association and its members become based on contribution (Tabarru’) rather
than exchange and a Tabarru’' can accommodate certain conditions ( i.e., that the
association compensate in case a hazardous event happens) . On the basis of this all the
"Islamic insurance companies" were established. In this regards al Zarka adds that if a
mutual or cooperative insurance exists he prefers it to profit motivated insurance out of
his respect to the opinion of opponents.
There is an old argument (from the 1950s), even by those who oppose insurance, that
whenever insurance is forced by law, one must do it and one is excused, from Shari’ah
point of view. This includes car insurance, social security, workman compensation, and
employer's imposed insurance if it is not optional for the employee.
to this I add another element that if the insurance provided by the employer is paid
completely from the employer, i.e., given as a fringe benefit without deducting any part
of the premium from the pay checks, then it is a kind of grant from the employer and if a
hazard happens the paid policy amount is Halal because the it is an outcome of the grant.
Now think for yourself: if your life insurance is only term life, you may apply the opinion
of Shaikh Zarka, and if it is imposed by employer, you also have room to accommodate,
and if it is a grant from employer it is also tolerated. Otherwise you need to see the
specifics of the contract you have and determine, in the light of the above briefing,
whether you keep or seek to withdraw from it

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
--------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Is Insurance Permissible and under what conditions?

Date: 12/8/00
To: dialogue@islam-online.net

My brief answer:
Dear Sister Nuzhat
As Salamu Alaikum,
You asked about insurance and interest.

Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salamu ala Rasuli Allah,


1- There are two main opinions about insurance: a- the majority's opinion: insurance run
by profit-making companies is not permitted because its exchange contract involves great
deal of Gharar. Gharar is ignorance or ambiguity. It applies in the contract to the
commitment of the insurance company, both the amount and its due date. However, it is
not sinful to undertake any insurance that is required by law or by employer's system.
The solution is to create a insurance Islamic cooperative (mutual). Or participate in one
that exists. In a cooperative you pay a premium as a contribution to the insurance pool of
funds and if any thing is left it will distributed back to the members (contributors) and if
the pool wasn't sufficient they go back to members for the deficit, usually in the form of
an increase of next period's contribution. The Gharar in this arrangement is still there, but
the condition of avoidance of Gharar is relaxed in cooperative/contributory entities that
are based on some kind of membership relationship while it is a must in exchange
contracts.
2- The minority's opinion is that insurance contracted with a profit making is permissible
on the ground that this Gharar is only apparent not real because the relationship is in
reality based on the statistical laws of probability that only applies to large number and
when you look at it from this angle it is a form of cooperation created by an entrepreneur,
venture taker, who put together the premiums of the policy holders in an insurance pool
of fund. The function of this entrepreneur is new, legitimate and beneficial and she
deserves compensation in term of profit (or loss if she didn't do it right or did it at the
wrong time, etc.).
In both views the insured thing must be permissible (Halal) e.g., it is forbidden to insure a
shipment of alcoholic beverages and the transaction must not involve any interest as
interest is prohibited too, e.g., a fixed-amount life insurance includes interest which is
compound and it accrues on the investment part of the premium for the duration of the
policy.
3- Interest that is practiced in banks here in America and in many conventional financial
contracts is the same as Riba that is mentioned in the Qur'an, it is strongly prohibited with
a declaration of war by the Almighty Allah and His messenger (Surah 2 Verse 279).
Muslims must avoid interest in their transactions wherever they live, in America or in the
Middle East.

Wa Allahu A'lam,
Monzer Kahf
------------------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Insurance of personal belongings

Date: 1/16/2001
To: scitech@islam-online.net
Name of Questioner: Gale Gender: Female Age
Education Date Submitted: 12/7/2000 User Ref. No: K2NUJU

Question
Can I insure my belongings? I rent a townhouse and in the past I have been
robbed.

My Answer
Dear Sister Gale:
Assalamu Alaikum,
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salamu ala Rasuli Allah.
I really believe that the opinion of the late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka is excellently
respectable, useful and consistent with the basic rules of Usul al Fiqh and the objectives
of Shari'ah. In brief, his opinion can be summarized in the following:
The insurance contract is a new and useful one, it came about as a result of new
technological inventions and new economic relationships that resulted in having a large
number of people having similar protection needs, it does not violate any of the
established rules of Shari'ah, it has precedents in known contracts in Shari'ah and the
ambiguity that appears in it is only because we look at it in isolation of the circumstances
of its reason d'être, the large number and applications of probability theory.
If the contract does not involve any other prohibition it must be permissible. Examples of
other prohibitions are: an interest clause or its subject being forbidden (e.g.,
transportation of alcoholic beverages).
CONSEQUENTLY: KEEPING THE ABOVE IN MIND, IT IS PERMISSIBLE TO
INSURE HOUSES, CARS, BELONGINGS, ETC.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
------------------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Is life insurance permissible?

From: dialogue@islam-online.net
Date: 2/14/2001
Name of Questioner agil Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Diploma Date Submitted 1/4/2001 User Ref. No. 9ZLYXW

Question
Assalamu Alaikum warahmat Allah wa barakatuhu wa ba'ad, first question: Life
insurance Policy is Halal (allowed) or Haram in Islam? Second question : Is Progress
Payment Financing (??) prohibited or allowed? jazakumullahu Khairan, agil
Notes
ps.: progress payment financing means I have a bill with delayed schedule of payment. I
bring this bill to the bank to get cash in advance with a little reduction or discount on the
amount of the bill. Thanks

My Answer:
Dear Br. Agil
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
1- Life insurance policies provided by Islamic life insurance companies are Halal.
2- Insurance, all: life and other kinds, are not permissible according to a group of Ulama
mainly because they are based on Gharar. Gharar here is the unknowing of the number of
premiums one has to pay because one does not know when one is going to die, and
unknowing the date of payment of the insurance benefit (for the life insurance) and the
amount for others (health, hazards and accidents). According to this group such Gharar
becomes forsaken if the contract is based on cooperation and Tabarru' (you give the
premium to a cooperative and it compensates those who are hurt).
The late Shaikh Zarka believed that insurance is a new contract that has certain similarity
to known contracts in the Fiqh traditions. It is permissible if it avoids the known
prohibitions: it must be void of Riba and the insured must be permissible (insuring a
shipment of wine is not permissible).
3 - Hence, applying the view of Zarka, which I tend to accept, implies that term life
insurance and variable whole life must be permissible if you avoid investment in
prohibited stocks (for the Variable life).
4- Progress Payment Financing: I need more details, I am not clear about it.
5- Discounting commercial and other debts of future maturity is forbidden. It is the same
Riba but going backward instead of forward. There is a resolution by the OIC Fiqh
Academy on this prohibition.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
--------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Employment insurance

From: dialogue@islam-online.net
Date: 3/2/2001

Question
Is insurance of job allowed?
Notes: Assalamu Alaykum, I'm an expatriate working in UAE. Some of the insurance
companies here, have recently introduced Insurance schemes covering the loss of job.
There are continuous uncertainties in my profession. However, I have not taken this
Insurance cover because I'm afraid the security provided by this insurance, in principle
goes against the efforts in seeking Allah (SWT)'s protection of my career. I have just seen
the Fatwa delivered in this site saying insurance cover for one's properties is not Haram.
What is your ruling on this employment insurance?

My Answer:
Dear Br./Sr.
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
Once we accept the opinion of the Late Shaikh al Zarka on insurance (and I do), that
insurance is permissible as long as we avoid Riba and insuring any forbidden thing, job
insurance falls within the limit of Halal whether it is managed by a state agency like the
social security in America or by private, profit seeking companies, of course if the job
itself is permissible.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Insurance for Muslims in the United States

From: dialogue@islam-online.net
Date: 3/3/2001
Name of Questioner Daud ender Male age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 2/7/2001 User Ref. No. FCH2L3

Question:
Assalamu Alaykum WRWB, What are the rulings regarding insurance? In the US, auto
insurance is mandatory, but many of us have life, medical and dental insurance also.
Jazakullah for any advice you can offer.

My Answer:
Dear Br. Daud
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
Insurance is a new contract that was developed in the West over several centuries. It
started with Marine insurance that insures shipped mechanizes from one port to another
against all marine hazards. It was extended to other areas with time. Insurance contract is
usually between an insurer (the company) and an owner (of the policy), and the subject of
the insurance may be maritime hazards, other accidents such as fire and natural hazards,
health, income (usually from jobs) of life of the owner of the policy or any other person.
Insurance relationships depend on the probability theory, without which it was impossible
to develop the insurance relationships. This means it depends on a large number of
insured things, large to the extent that you can calculate the probability or frequency of
occurrence of the insured incidence. In plain terms an insurance contract in one between
an insurer and an owner whereby the owner pays known amount(s), called premium, as a
lump sum or on intervals and the insurer pledges to pay a given amount if some incidence
takes place.
In these plain terms either of the two parties to the contract with the exception of a
lump sum payment of premium, does not exactly know his obligations and rights because
all that depends on the unknown occurrence of a well-defined incidence. In other words,
you don't know for how many month you are going to pay premiums on a car insurance
since an accident may happen at any time during the period of the contract and the car
may be totaled, and the insurer doesn't know when and hoe much his obligation is
because all depends on the date an accident happens, if at all, and on the extent of the
damage.
On the other hand, contracts known to our respected Fuqaha are those that were
developed over a period of almost three centuries of the Glories of the Islamic
civilization, between the first and fourth centuries of Hijrah. After that period we were
almost always chewing on our past grandiose achievements. The insurance contract came
new to the Muslim land and our Ulama had to deal with it in the light of what we have.
There are two contracts developed during those centuries that carry certain ambiguity that
may resemble that which is in the insurance contract: Road Security Contract and
Guarding Contract. In the road Security Contract one guarantees to compensate another
for road hazards (of caravans), and in the Guarding contract one guarantees to provide
peace of mind to the other. Yet the first contract is based on Pure voluntary contribution
from the guarantor without any premium on the part of the guaranteed, while in the
guarding contract the guard does not guarantee any loss, he only provide his time.
The dilemma with the insurance contract, in the mind of Fuqaha is two folds: 1) you
really are exchanging money paid now (premium) for money paid later (compensation or
cost of repair); and 2) the great deal of ambiguity that envelops the amount and date of
the obligation of the insurer.
The position of contemporary Fuqaha on Insurance: there are four opinions.
1- A small minority, all of them are ninth and tenth level, on a scale of one to ten
where one is the best in their knowledge and depth, that since an incidence comes as a
will of Allah, an insurance contract gambles on the Will of Allah, it is therefore
forbidden. This opinion is discarded because it is based on misunderstanding. The
insurance contract does not prevent hazards and incidences, it rather deals with their
financial results.
2- A small minority argues that since it involves Riba and Ambiguity (Gharar) it is
forbidden and there is no remedy for it. When it is obligatory by law, you have to take it
reluctantly, out of being required though it is Haram, and you are InShaAllah not sinful
because you did not take it by choice.
3- The Majority does not find in the contract any Riba per se and does not like its
ambiguity (Gharar). They argue that the Gharar is too much to tolerate. The remedy they
offer is to adjust the contract and make it based on mutual cooperation (Ta'awun) and
voluntary contribution (Tabarru'). Establish a cooperative for one or all kinds of
insurance and make all members (policy owners) give a voluntary contribution to the
cooperative with the condition that if the insured incidence happened, the cooperative
shall compensate.... They further argue that it is true the ambiguity is still there even in
the cooperative, but ambiguity (even big one) is tolerated in Tabarru' contracts while it is
not tolerated in exchange contracts.
On the basis of this opinion several Islamic insurance companies were set up by
Islamic banks and other concerned Muslims. But because existing laws in the Muslim
countries do not permit establishing cooperatives for insurance and require that an
insurance company must have certain minimum capital, they made a company that
creates a cooperative fund for insurance and invest its capital with the founding Islamic
Bank, i.e., in reality returns its capital to the founders.
4- The late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka argues, essentially on the basis of general rules
and the objectives of Shari'ah that this is a new and useful contract and it must therefore
be permissible. He refutes the claims of Riba and Gharar by indicating the contract
between the two parties must be looked at in the light of the laws of probability and large
numbers that in reality preserve the idea of cooperation of the insured; and he brings in
the resemblance to the Road Security and the Guarding contracts, he further argues that
the conditional Tabarru' is really an exchange and you better face it directly, so what is
wrong in some entrepreneur taking it as a business to bring those insured together to a
form of cooperation the entrepreneur makes. This means that according to Zarka not only
cooperative/Tabarru’ based insurance is permissible but also an insurance contract
offered by a company that seeks to make profit is also permissible. He puts two
conditions for the permissibility of an insurance contract: a) it must have no Riba
involved in it; and b) the insured thing must be permissible, i.e., you may not insure a
shipment of pork.

This means that


1-Life insurance and other insurance policies offered by Islamic insurance companies are
Halal.
2- Insurance of all kinds, life and others: are not permissible according to a group of
Ulama mainly because they are based on Gharar. Such Gharar becomes forsaken if the
contract is based on cooperation and Tabarru' ( you give the premium to a cooperative
and it compensates those who are hurt).
3 - The late Shaikh Zarka believed that insurance is a new contract that must be
permissible.
4 - Hence, applying the view of Zarka implies that term life insurance and variable whole
life must be permissible if you avoid investment in prohibited stocks (for the Variable
life). So are other kinds of insurance. On the other hand fixed-value life insurance is not
permissible because its value is the result of placing the investment part of the premium
at the guaranteed interest rate.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Is health insurance permissible?

From: dialogue@islam-online
Date: 8/7/2001
Name of Questioner Deena Gender Age
Education Date Submitted 7/6/2001 country of Origin
User Ref. No. 4ACC26 country of Residence
Question:
I always heard that having life insurance is Haram. My questions is, is health insurance
Haram too?

My Answer:
Dear Sr. Deena
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
What you've heard always is not accurate
there are three opinions about insurance, no difference between life, health, accidents,
and transportation.
One: it is All Haram, because it involves gambling, Riba and Gharar (ignorance and/or
uncertainty about the existence of an obligation in an exchange contract).
Two: It only has a great deal of Gharar, hence it is forbidden. If it can be reformulated on
the basis of mutual, reciprocal or cooperative company and the premium is then given as
contribution (donation or Tabarru'), with a condition of reciprocity, Insurance can then be
permissible, because Gharar is permissible in contributory relations not in exchange
relations. On this basis what is called Islamic insurance companies were founded in some
Muslim countries.
Three: it is permissible provided the contract does not have any other reason for
considering it Haram. Such reason may be an interest clause or the object of the insurance
may be forbidden like a shipment of spirits.
I go along with the third opinion whose champion is the late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-----------------------------
SUBJECT: Is Comprehensive Car insurance permissible?

From: Islam on line


Date: 12/18/2001
Name of Questioner Gender Age
Education Date Submitted 12/8/2001
country of Origin country of Residence

Question
Can we have car insurance for all the risks, or just the obligatory car insurance?

My Answer:
Dear Br.
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
Insurance service and contracts were invented and developed over the last four centuries
in Europe, then extended to the Americas. They reached the Muslim World in the
Nineteen century c.e. Obviously they were not known at the time of revelation of Shari'ah
nor at the time of the great scholars who founded the known Fiqh Schools.
Over the last more than a hundred years, Muslim scholars looked at insurance as a new
service that accompanies new risks intrinsic to technological applications, and as a
contract. Two points of view have developed: One that studies insurance within the
context of its environment, i.e., the presence of a large number of persons exposed to
similar risks that calls for the application of the theory of probability and what is called
the laws of large numbers; and the other looks at insurance as only a specific relationship
between two parties regardless of its environment.
The first trend was lead by the late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka. He argued that, as a new
service and contract, insurance groups together the risks of a large number of persons and
redistribute them in a manner that makes them bearable. This is a form of healthy
cooperation that is compatible with the Universal Objectives of Shari'ah and whence the
theory of probability is taken into consideration, the insurance contract does not contain
any unbearable amount of ambiguity or undue uncertainty (Gharar). ACCORDING TO
THIS VIEW ALL KINDS OF INSURANCE CONTRACTS (CARS, HAZARDS,
ACCIDENTS, TRANSPORTATION, LIFE, ETC.) ARE PERMISSIBLE PROVIDED
TWO CONDITIONS ARE FULFILLED: 1- the contract must not contain any Riba
(interest) element, and 2- the object of insurance must be permissible in Shari'ah (i.e.,
insuring a shipment of liquor is not permissible). It doesn't matter whether this
cooperation is founded by a group of concerned persons in the form of cooperatives or by
a venturer person or company that takes charge of offering the service of pooling together
the risks of a large number of persons. Consequently, car insurance is permissible for the
obligatory liability as well as for the value of the car and the hazards to driver and
passengers and every other insurance coverage related to cars and driving them.
According to the other view, any conventional insurance contract between two persons
contains elements of Riba, ambiguity, and Gharar. Riba is because you pay a usually
small premium and get back a large sum should a risk happens, Gharar because you don't
know whether you will get the large sum or not since you don't know whether a hazard
will happen, and ambiguity because you don't know the exact amount you get (though
you know the maximum only) nor when it is going to be given to you since you don't
know when an accident will happen. THIS GROUP OF SCHOLARS ARGUES THAT
THESE OBJECTIONS MAY BE OVERRIDDEN WHEN THE SERVICE OF
INSURANCE IS OFFERED ON DONATION BASIS THROUGH COOPERATIVES
BECAUSE IF YOU GIVE THE PREMIUM AS A DONATION OBJECTIONS OF
RIBA, AMBIGUITY AND GHARAR DO NOT APPLY BECAUSE DONATIONS
ARE NOT EXCHANGE CONTRACTS. AND IT DOESN'T HURT IF SUCH
DONATIONS ARE GIVEN TO A COOPERATIVE WHOSE SYSTEM IS TO COVER
THESE RISKS EVEN WITH THE FACT THAT YOU REALLY KNOW THIS
COVERAGE IN ADVANCE AND YOU GIVE THE DONATION WITH THE
CONDITION THAT SUCH A COVERAGE EXISTS.
According to this view only mutual (cooperative insurance is permitted, the same two
conditions mentioned in the first opinion apply here too. Hence, any insurance outside
cooperatives is not permitted, and when you are required by law to take it you only take
the part you don't have any choice about it.
In my opinion, there are too much artificialities in the second view and I go along with
the first opinion, that all insurance is permissible provided the two conditions are
observed.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------
SUBJECT: Life insurance

From: Islam on line writes:


Date: 2/11/2002
Name of Questioner: osamah Gender: Male Age: 15-20
Education Diploma Date Submitted: 1/17/2002
country of Origin Canada User Ref. No. LKV4K1 country of Residence U S A

Question
Dear Shaikh Assalamu Alaikum Wa Rahmatullah Wa Barakatuh In fact I just started
working at a Financial company and a lot of things came to my concern, but mainly two
things and they are as follow: 1. Is life insurance Halal or not? If no but what is there to
replace it? 2. Is RESP(Registered Education Savings Plan) Halal? Because a lot of people
here in North America have problems paying for their education and they have no other
choice than taking RESP or take loan for their college which they will have to pay
interest on it? But the question is the RESP companies invest the money that is given to
them by the people who buy RESP's in something called BONDS, so is it Halal or not. I
appreciate your work brothers and I know you guys do a lot of Fatawa but if you would
please put this one of your prior ones. Jazakumu Allah Khair Wassalam Alaikum Wa
Rahmatullah Wa Barakatuh

My Answer:
Dear Br. osamah
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
Notice, Dear Brother, that both questions are about issues that are relatively new, that you
are not going to find a Verse or a Hadith about them.

1) Life insurance has no substitute in classical Islamic Fiqh. When our classical Fiqh was
developed life was much less complicated than it is in our days. They didn't need such a
contract and they didn't make it. Sale is true for the registered education saving plan.
Contemporary Fuqaha discussed life insurance in the light of the principles of Shari'ah
(that are obviously derived from the Qur'an and the Sunnah). A life insurance contract
triggers three issues known in Shari'ah: Riba, gambling and Gharar.
Any contract based on Riba is forbidden in Shari'ah. Riba as you know is one of the most
resentful sins in Islam and it is clearly prohibited in verses 275-279 of Surah II. Riba is
pivotal in fixed life insurance policies, because the value of the policy is derived from the
accumulation of interest over the invested part of premiums over the duration of the
contract. But there are life insurance contracts that do not have this element such as
variable equity life insurance and term life contract.
Gharar (that is prohibited in several Ahadith and its avoidance is a corner stone of
business contracts in Shari'ah, it means ambiguity in any of the mutual) is in the lack of
knowledge of the date payment of the policy value by the company, i.e., the date of death
and this may result in unknown number of premiums in certain contracts.
The Gambling factor comes in the risk. Risk in life insurance creates a gambling type of
exchange. At the time of contract the company gamble on getting only one premium and
having to pay the policy amount any time if death happens, and the policy holder pays
one payment and get, by risk chance, a large lump-sum.
The late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka argued that the amount of risk in life insurance is not as
big as it is in gambling, this makes it tolerable, especially that the life insurance contract
is useful and provides real service in the contemporary living conditions all over the
world, and that the Shari'ah had recognized certain risk management contract, that were
part of the life conditions in the part, why not recognizing this too? He also argued that
the Gharar element is also tolerable because it is addressed through the theory of
probability (large number effect). Most Fuqaha agree with him on the issue of gambling,
but only few (though brilliant)! Go along on the issue of Gharar.
Zarka’s opinion is that if an insurance contract does not contain interest and its subject is
permitted, it must be then accepted from Shari'ah point of view. This applies on all kinds
of insurance including life. It means that fixed value life insurance is not permitted
because it is interest-based. Term life and any form of variable equity in which premiums
are invested in permissible stocks and mutual funds are permissible.
Those who consider the Gharar element detrimental to this contract provide an alternative
through Mutual/cooperative insurance. Mutual insurance is not profit making it is like a
cooperative pool of funds that helps members who are hit by the insured incidence. Those
Fuqaha argue that Gharar is not wiped out in cooperative insurance, in fact it is still there,
but the spirit of cooperation overweighs it since cooperation is founded on contributory
basis (Tabarru') and Gharar is tolerated in contributions.
2) If funds in SESP are invested in bonds it is Haram since Bonds are interest-generating
loans. If funds are invested in permissible stocks and/or mutual funds, the SESP becomes
permissible.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
------------------------------
SUBJECT: Free Life insurance as an employment fringe benefit

Date: 2/16/2002
From: Islam on line writes:
Name of Questioner Khaldoon Gender Male Age 21-30
Education Graduate Date Submitted 1/29/2002 country of Origin
User Ref. No. J97PA4 country of Residence USA

Question:
I Live in the US. My employer gives me life insurance without a fee (as an added
benefit). Do I have to follow Islamic laws of inheritance when I figure out the
beneficiaries of the policy?

My Answer:
Dear Br. Khaldoon
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
There are two opinions on this matter; both of them have strong arguments:
1- The benefits of an insurance policy are not owned by you. They only become due
upon the demise of the insured, especially in the kind of life insurance given with
employment package, that is usually term life insurance (in some regular life insurance
policies, there is a value of the policy before death. that values is normally owned by
either the insured or the person who purchased the policy. This value, if owned by the
insured, must go as regular inheritance and be distributed accordingly).
Accordingly the beneficiary you assign shall become the first owner of the benefit when
the insurance company owes it. There is no inheritance here as you see.
2- The second opinion derives from a Hadith about blood money. a woman was
accidentally killed by another woman, the Diyyah (blood money) was ordered distributed
by the Prophet, pbuh, in accordance to inheritance rules. The Fuqaha who opt for this
opinion argue that here is an example of money not owned by the deceased yet
distributed as inheritance. (The reply of opponents: this is an exception of the principle
of ownership, and you cannot extend exceptions by analogy.
If I were you, I would appoint a beneficiary who is most deserving, such as wife and
children, especially if young, or mother who depends on my support, etc.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-------------------------------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Life insurance and educational insurance

From: Islam on Line


Sent: February 27, 2002
Name of Questioner A. S. Gender Female Age 31-45
Education Diploma Date Submitted 2/1/2002
country of Origin UAE User Ref. No. Y4IM8T country of Res. Kenya

Question
Assalamu Alaikum Wa Rahmatullah Allah Wa Barakatuh!!! My question is on Insurance.
Would you please advise if insurance is acceptable? We have currently life insurances as
well as Educational Insurance for our daughter. Additional to that, we have gone under a
Pension Plan Scheme which is compulsory through our offices and I am participating in
the Stock Purchase Scheme within the company from long time back. I am working in an
Oil related company. I'd also appreciate if you can advise as what would be the most
appropriate way to invest your money in the Islamic way I'd appreciate if you can let me
know on all the above points step by step through my e-mail address.
Notes
I'd prefer that my name and e-mail address is not published on the web.

My Answer:
In the Name of Allah the Most compassion the Most Merciful
May All Praise and Thanks be to God, the Almighty, The Lord of the Worlds and Peace
and Prayers be on His Messenger the Prophet Muhammad and all his Companions and
Followers
Dear Sr. A. S.
Assalamu Alaykum Wa Rahmatullahi Wa Barakatuh
Please look at the answer given to Br. Daud above and I add here:
For the Education Insurance for your daughter, you need to check if it is interest based,
and most such insurances are, if so you may have to consider changing it.
I can't advice on investments it is a matter of opportunities and availability, the guidelines
is to avoid interest transactions and any company that is heavily in the area of interest or
any other Haram products or services.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Monzer Kahf
----------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Are medical and long term care insurances permissible?

From: Islam on Line


Sent: March 21, 2002
Name of Questioner Jamal Gender Male Age Above 60
Education Graduate Date Submitted 3/4/2002 Email
country of Origin United States User Ref. No. 4NFSCL country of Resi. USA

Question
Is it Halal to purchase medical insurance and Long Term Care insurance? If not, how do
we deal with these potential severe financial events?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Jamal
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Please read the Fatwa given on 12/18/2001; the same applies to medical and long term
insurance as well as other kinds of insurance.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------------
SUBJECT: Mutual or Cooperative Insurance

From: Islam on line


Sent: April 14, 2002
Name of Questioner Abdulla Gender Age
Education Date Submitted 4/8/2002 Email
country of Origin India User Ref. No.QP1XAL country of res. India

Question
What is the rule of Islam about taking shares of companies and organizations like ICCI.
Please shed a light on my question. May Allah assemble us in his Jannatul-Firdaus. What
is the Shari’ah rule about taking insurance? We need to take this type of savings to get
relief from tax. Please reply for this too.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Abdulla
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
1- You will need to explain what is ICCI. Until then my answer about it is I don't know...
2- It is permissible to buy shares of companies whose activities are permissible and
whose management does not undertake any prohibited contracts, such as Riba, etc.
Companies that may indulge in Riba and other prohibited contracts while their products/
services are permissible are disputed. Some Ulama argue that while the principle is that
owning their shares is forbidden because what the management does is done in the name
and on behalf of shareholders, such a prohibition cause hardship to individual Muslims
especially those like you who live as Minorities in their countries. Those Ulama call for
relaxation based on the Shari'ah principle that hardship always should be removed. They
design e few criteria that seem reasonable, you can find these criteria in the web of the
Islamic market Dow Jones.
3- Cooperative/ mutual insurance is permissible provided premiums are paid on
contributory basis. Insurance offered by profit seeking companies is considered, by a
large group of Ulama, as containing Gharar (ambiguity regarding the number of
premiums and date due of compensation. Other Ulama find insurance offered by
commercial companies permissible on the ground that once we look at the large number
and the theory of probability the Gharar becomes much smaller than thought of, and
consequently tolerable in Shari'ah. I subscribe to the latter view. There are two conditions
here: 1) the insurance contract must not contain any Riba element such as an investment
clause at fixed interest and 20 the object of insurance must be permissible, e.g., one
cannot insure a wine shipment.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-----------------------
SUBJECT: Accident Insurance offered by credit cards

From: Islam on line


Sent: Tuesday, April 16, 2002
Name of Questioner Ossama Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 3/25/2002 Email
country of Origin Egypt User ref. No. 8HSAUV country of Res. Egypt

Question
Dear Sirs, I'm asking about insurance, because I have a credit card, they but extra fees on
my account as an insurance against accidents. I can cancel this service but I want to know
is this insurance right or wrong??? Please advise me about this matter to go on or to
cancel this service. Thanks for your cooperation Yours Ossama

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. Ossama
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Many scholars believe that commercially run insurance (this applies to this accident
insurance of the credit card) is not permissible because it includes a great deal of Gharar
(ambiguity with regard to whether the amount of the insurance policy will ever be paid,
its date of payment if it will be paid and for how long the payment of premium will
continue). They suggest that an alternative based on mutuality or cooperation may be
permissible if premiums are paid to the cooperative on donation basis (Tabarru').
Several other scholars argue that the amount of Gharar is tolerable because insurance is a
contract based on probability. And those believe that commercial insurance is also
permissible. I support this view.
By the way, accidental insurance offered by credit cards is usually a lot more expensive
than what you can get from other insurance companies!

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------
SUBJECT: Comprehensive or liability only car insurance?

From: Islam on line


Sent: April 18, 2002
Name of Questioner Gender Male Age 21-30
Education Graduate Date Submitted 4/5/2002 Email
country of Origin United Kingdom User Ref. No. 7ZVXYV country of Res. U K

Question
AsSalaamu alaikum. The ruling that i have heard concerning taking car insurance is that
it is not in general permissible. However in lands such as mine where driving without
insurance will lead to prosecution and license suspensions I have heard that in this case it
falls under the rulings of necessity. However, one should not go to excess and should
strive to find the cheapest such as taking "third party fire and theft" which is the
minimum to legally drive instead of "fully comprehensive." My question is that when
making this payment i found that companies offer a one year insurance which i find
unaffordable in a single payment. They then say you can pay for it in installments if you
wish, however the total of the installments amounts to more than the yearly amount
quoted. When i asked is this excess amount interest they reply "yes". I did further
research and found that a small amount of companies offer a three month contract which
you pay for in full and is affordable to me. However i found that four three month
contracts totals more than a one year contract paid by installments. Therefore, please
inform me which is the lesser of evil, to pay more in total (i.e. per year) through regularly
buying a three month contract or to buy a one year contract and pay for it by installments.
The latter option technically means that less money is being spent on this Munkar
however it means falling into both insurance and interest?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br.
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
1-Insurance is not Haram. Insurance is controversial, some say it is Haram and others
believe it is permissible. I personally go along with the permissibility as long as the
contract does not include an interest clause. According to this second view you can take
any car insurance, not only the third party. Even those who consider it not permissible but
take exception when you live in countries that enforce it on all car owners do not suggest
that you put your life in jeopardy if an accident happens and you don't have sufficient
insurance to cover your car and properties. Life in a world that has iron (or aluminum) as
moving machines requires insurance protection and when there is no cooperative
insurance, you take the one in the market. They don't argue that you must take only third
party.
2-Why do you need to ask, when they tell you that monthly payment is so much and you
take the monthly plan as your contract, about the difference, what is it? (Remember the
story of the cow in the Qur'an and its lessons). Besides, most likely you and the person
who told you the difference is interest are incorrect. For instance the law in the USA
prohibits charging interest on the differences in payment plans, because the insurance
service is one that goes on with time and if you pay monthly, you are covered monthly
and if you pay yearly you are covered yearly. Do you notice that it cost more to handle 12
payments than one payment, in a early contact, in the companies records, and it cost even
more to handle monthly renewal of contract and payment than one contract and one
payment for the whole year. Most of such difference reflect the cost of handling not
interest of the amount, because the amount is not due if you select a monthly or a
quarterly plan and interest is only on due amounts,

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-----------------------
SUBJECT: Life and property insurances
From: Islam on line
Sent: April 27, 2002
Name of Questioner na'eem Gender Female Age 31-45
Education Diploma Date Submitted 4/9/2002 Email
country of Origin United Kingdom User Ref. No. 9SGH2H country of Res. U K

Question
Can u give some information on: 1. Life insurance to cover mortgage, 2. House contents
insurance to cover loss and theft, 3. building insurance to cover loss, damage etc. what is
the Islamic stance on these issues given that life insurance will mean that if the
breadwinner dies then the insurance company will pay the remaining mortgage thus
meaning the wife could continue to live in the house without having to settle the
remaining mortgage which would have been the case had there not been life insurance. in
the case of contents insurance, one pays a premium and the insurance company pays out
if there is any damage or theft of the household contents. in the case of the buildings
insurance the mortgage lender requires it as a condition of lending the money in order to
protect his/ her property against any damage/ fire etc but the premium is paid by the
lender. Your advice on the Islamic stance in each of these instances would be much
appreciated. Wassalam

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Sr. na'eem
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Insurance, in all its kind including the three you mentioned and life insurance
too, is controversial there are two main views and the difference relates more to who
offers it: a view that considers Forbidden all types of insurance offered on commercial
basis, i. e., by companies that aims at making profit from the exchange contracts of
insurance. The basis is that such contracts contain a big amount of ambiguity regarding
the date of payment of the policy value, because you don't know whether an accident is
going to happen and when, and the number of premiums that will be paid. For
those scholars the alternative is a cooperative insurance in which premiums are paid on a
donation basis to the pool of fund. The reason is not that here there is no ambiguity but
that ambiguity is forgiven in cooperation and in donations.
The second view is pioneered by the late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka. It argues that
insurance, as a new contract is useful and the amount of ambiguity in it is little if we look
at the probability theory that is the basis of the actuarial calculations of insurance; further,
there are traditional contracts that offer similar service and they are approved in the
Shari'ah such as the contract that offers a guarantee of road safety which is known in
classical Fiqh. People of this view put two conditions for acceptability of insurance
contracts: 1- there must be no interest clause in the contract (the three contracts you
mention normally do not have interest) and 2- the subject of the insurance must be
permissible (e.g., it is forbidden to insure a shipment of alcoholic drinks) and the
contracts you mention are not in this prohibited category.
I personally agree with the second opinion and believe that the three insurance contracts
you mentioned are permissible.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------------
SUBJECT: Fire and Accident Insurance in Canada

From: Islam on line


Date: May 02, 2002
Name of Questioner Senad Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 4/18/2002 Email
country of Origin Canada User Ref. No. SCZWV8 country of Res. Canada

Question
Assalamu Alaikum, I have a specific problem. My 3 year old son is not a fully normal
child and as such, has a tendency to create big problems at home due to his over-active
energetic behavior. I am afraid that he will one day, accidentally set fire to my house or
destroy something of value for which I will not be able to pay for. Under this
circumstance, is it permissible for me to buy house insurance? I would like to be a part of
the Takaful system instead of buying the insurance, but unfortunately, no such system
exists in Canada. Please advise me. Thank you and May Allah reward you for your
efforts. Your brother in Islam, Senad.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. Senad
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Here again, Insurance is not indisputably forbidden. All kinds of insurance, including
accidents insurance like house insurance are new. They were not known in the past.
Shari'ah scholars who study insurance have not agreed on its prohibition. Some argue that
when it is offered by companies that aim at making profit, it is forbidden because it
contains a great deal of ambiguity.
Some others believe that the amount of ambiguity is not big to an extend that justifies a
prohibition, especially when you look at it from the angle of the probability theory as
applied to a large number of insured policy holders. I agree with this second opinion. And
I say it is permissible to take any insurance contract for houses, cars, life as long as the
contract does not include an interest clause.
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------
SUBJECT: life insurance on the bread earner

From: Islam on line


Sent: May 28, 2002
Name of Questioner mohamed Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 5/8/2002 Email
country of Origin Egypt User Ref. No. U46S8D country of Res. U S A

Question
I AM CONFUSED ABOUT LIFE INSURANCE POLICY DO YOU THINK a MAN IN
MY AGE [43]HAVE THREE KIDS THE OLDEST IN FIFTH GRADE .BANKS OWN
ME A LOT OF MONEY LAST TOW WEEKS I HAVE HAD HEALTH PROBLEMS .
DO YOU THINK IT IS HALAL TO GET LIFE HEALTH INSURANCE TO LEAVE
SOME FOR THE KIDS AND MY WIFE TO LIVE ON ? BECAUSE THEY DONOT
HAVE ANY BODY TO DEPEND ON WA GAZAKOM ALLAH WA ALSALAMO
ALIKOM WA RAHMATOALLA WABARAKATO.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. mohamed
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Yes, I think it is wise to take life insurance to leave some for the kids and wife. I believe
it is permissible in Shari’ah, and in that I follow the opinion of the late Shaikh Mustafa al
Zarka. Health insurance is another kind of policy, it is permissible too.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
------------------------
SUBJECT: Life insurance

From: Islam on line


Sent: June 02, 2002
Name of Questioner Amer Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 5/28/2002 Email
country of Origin U K User Ref. No. UL6DBK country of Res. U K
Question
What is the Islamic view on setting up a life cover contract in order to protect the welfare
of my wife and children after my death? In addition, Inheritance tax is payable at the rate
of 40% on any assets above £250,000. For someone with an estate of £2million the tax
bill would be £700,000. A life cover plan can be set up so that this bill is paid for from
the proceeds of the life cover contract. Again, what would be the Islamic view on setting
up such a contract?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. Amer
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
I am sure you mean by life cover contract a life insurance contract, don’t you?
Two main opinions; a majority’s that it is not permissible because it has a great deal of
ambiguity (Gharar); and I happen to be with the minority on this issue. The minority is
led by the late Shaikh Zarka, it is of the opinion that the amount of ambiguity in all kinds
of insurance contracts is tolerable and the life and other insurances are permissible with
two conditions: 1) the contract must not contain an interest clause, and 2) you an
insurance of a prohibited substance such as a shipment of liquor, is not valid.
The issue of taxes and liquidity is not of effect on the Fatwa.
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
--------------------
SUBJECT: Comprehensive car insurance

From: Islam on line


Sent: November 12, 2002
Name of Questioner Rubab Gender Female Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 11/9/2002 Email
country of Origin U A E User Ref. No. DUA8NC country of Res. Pakistan

Question
Is comprehensive car insurance (covering damage to your own car, its passengers, others’
cars or properties) HARAM in Islam? In case it is Haram, then what is permissible form
of car insurance to fulfill country’s traffic regulations? Jazakum Allah Khairan,

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. Rubab
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Comprehensive car insurance is permissible regardless of whether it is required by law or
not. This is the opinion of most learned scholars of the caliber of the late Shaikh Mustafa
al Zarka, died in 1999. the basis of this is that insurance is a very useful contract,
contemporary life makes it very often very important/essential; it is consistent with the
general objectives of the Shari'ah; it has similar examples in Shari'ah-recognized contract
that were practiced in the past, keeping in mind the differences in applied technology;
and it does not violate any of the specific rules of Shari'ah
Scholars who consider it forbidden submit to legal requirement and say only the part that
is required by the law of the land is permissible. If that part is only restricted to liability
toward third party body and property damage, so be it. this is the only part they consider
permissible under the rule of necessity. their argument for the prohibition of insurance, in
all its kinds, is based on the ambiguity in the amount and day of payment of the
responsibility of the insurer (the company).
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------
SUBJECT: Health and hazard insurance

From: Fatwa E [mailto:fatwae@islam-online.net]


Sent: December 29, 2002
Name of Questioner FARAJ Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Diploma Date Submitted 11/27/2002 Email
country of Origin Tanzania User Ref. No. H91DNX country of Res. Tanzania

Question
ASSALAAM ALAYKUM GOD BLESS YOU INSHALLAH I WANT AN ANSWER
ON TWO QUESTIONS 1. IS HEALTH INSURANCE OR MEDICAL INSURANCE
ALLOWED IN ISLAM? 2. TO TAKE BANK OVER DRAFT MONEY ON
EMERGENCY WHEN IN NEED IS IT ALLOWED IN ISLAM?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. FARAJ
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Health, hazard and similar forms of insurance are permissible according to the views of
the late Shaikh Zarka and I follow that opinion. there are scholars who argue for the
prohibition of insurance unless it is done on cooperative or mutual basis. I believe that
they do not have convincing argument for the prohibition of insurance provided by profit
seeking companies.
Over draft almost always involves interest. Interest is prohibited and certainly causing
interest to trigger is prohibited too. I doubt that there are cases that can be defined as
necessities from Shari'ah point of view to justify the relaxation of this prohibition; we
keep in mind though the Islamic axiom of Shari’ah that “necessities may relax a
prohibition.”

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------------------------

II. INSURANCE ON MUSLIMS AND ISLAMIC PROPERTIES IN


INDIA, THE USA AND OTHER WESTERN COUNTRIES

SUBJECT: Insurance on Mosques and Islamic Centers in the USA

From: Islam on line


Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2002
Salamu`alykum, hope you’re well and good. Please answer the following question.
Name of Questioner Nizam Gender Age
Education Date Submitted 5/8/2002 Email
country of Origin User Ref. No. CRSCF3 country of Residence

Question
The Muslim community of Bay Shore, Long Island, New York wishes to know whether it
is lawful to take out insurance on a mosque. This question arose because we are in the
process of completing our mosque, which was under construction for about a year and the
threat of vandalism is real due to the increased hostility against Muslims and Islamic
establishments after 9/11. Please provide us with a Fatwa on this question with reasons
for it.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. Nizam
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
At this time, insurance on Mosques and Islamic centers, schools etc. is not only
permissible, it is a must and we must prosecute for neglect any executive committee that
does not do that. The reason is the threat you mentioned after 9/11. It is a necessity now.
At other times, we discuss the Shari’ah experts’ opinions on the issue while relaxing.
Keeping in mind that insurance is a new thing and new contract that was not known in
the history of Islam, there are three opinions on insurance, of all kinds that include
maritime, life, accidents, hazards and others: 1) all insurances are forbidden because they
are speculative on the future and future is in the Hands of God, insurance contracts also
has interest, ambiguity and imbalance (Gharar) and gambling. This opinion does not
really stand argument, it stems of ignorance of what insurance is. 2) Insurance that is
offered by companies that aim to make profit (in contrast to mutual or cooperative
companies) is forbidden because it is an exchange contract between two parties and it
contains Gharar. The Gharar element comes from the point that in most cases, you don’t
know how many premiums you are going to pay and when and how much the company is
going to give you as the amount of damage and it date are not known at the time of the
contract. People of this opinion believe that the insurance contract can be remedied from
Shari’ah point of view if two changes are made: make the insurer a cooperative or a
mutual body whose members are the policy holders and make premiums be given as
donations to the cooperative or mutual company provided that it compensate any hazard
that happens to its members. These two conditions make the contract permissible not
because they remove the Gharar; it still exists. But because Gharar is tolerable in
donations (Tabarru’at) not in exchange contracts. 3) The amount of Gharar in the
contract, as it is between a money maker insurer and an insured, is not substantial enough
to warrant prohibition especially if we notice that insurance is based on the probability
theory and can’t be worked out without a large number of insured people/things. The
guru of this opinion is the late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka, died in 1999, and for the last
quarter of a century was the top Shari’ah Scholar in the world. This opinion is also
supported by the late Maududi and by many other Shari’ah scholars. I go along with this
view. There are two conditions though that must be satisfied: there must be no interest
section in the contract, many life insurance contracts have interest clauses, and the
insured must be permissible in Shari’ah, e.g., insuring a shipment of liquor is not
permissible because owning and transporting it are not.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------
SUBJECT: life and property insurance in India

From: Islam on line


Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2002
Name of Questioner yusuf Gender Male Age 21-30
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 5/12/2002 Email
country of Origin India User Ref. No. YMRCPG country of Res. India

Question
assalamu alaikum first I would like to thank Islam on line for the great service to the
Ummah and particularly younger generation. My question to Monzer Kahf because his
fatwa on insurance is the most consistent. I’m in India today essentially a strong anti
Muslim anti Islam country where Muslims both in private as well as in govt jobs if they
get with ALLAHS GRACE are confined to great discrimination. I’m working as an
insurance agent in an American company and I have also recruited my Muslim brothers
as they don’t have any work and all of them r able to make a decent living by insuring
their loved once; and amount of risk faced my our Muslim brothers i feel very happy in
selling them insurance because it is very good for their family in case of any calamity.
India has no Islamic banking or insurance but keeping in mind the risk to life and
property of Muslims it is required; and due to negative conception among Muslims the
business also goes to non Muslims who make money by selling them to Muslims. Local
muftis here say you can buy but not sell insurance whish i feel is ridiculous. Kindly
advice is my working in insurance company in India justified and helping my Muslim
brothers by giving them jobs and security is it justified.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. Yusuf
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
You asked this question on live Fatwa and were given an answer, why do you have to
take share of others and use their time for you my dear brother?
Here is a copy of what you already have:
In the name of Allah, The most Merciful, The most compassionate.
Praise be to Allah Lord of the Worlds.
Peace and blessings be on His final Messenger Muhammed.
Dear Br. Yusuf:
Asslamu alikum wa rahamtulahi wa barakathu
To begin with, life and other kind of insurances are controversial among Islamic Shari’ah
experts. Some Ulama view them as prohibited because of the amount ambiguity (Gharar)
that is involved regarding the obligations of the two parties and the date the insurance
face value becomes due.
I go along with the minority’s opinion that insurance is permitted on the grounds the
amount of ambiguity is tolerable especially that insurance is based on the theory of
probability and large number of policy holders.
In special cases as in Muslims in India, I think the opinion you mentioned about some
Ulama who encourage Muslims to take insurance is very wise. This morning I was asked
about property insurance for mosques in the US after 9/11 and I gave the opinion that it
must be obligatory to the extent that the executive committee of the association that runs
the mosque must be prosecuted for neglect to take sufficient safe guards if they did not
insure the mosque building. I fully agree that at this time life and property insurance for
Muslims in India may not only be recommended but obligatory.
With regard to selling insurance, we must realize that in any controversial matter we
should not oblige people to take the more difficult position. This means that even in
normal times and situations working in an insurance company are permissible and the
income you derive, as commissions and/or salaries, is InShaAllah Halal. Obviously if we
agree that buying insurance is recommended, facilitating it for Muslims must a good and
perhaps recommended way to earn a living.
Finally, you have given a lot of thought and wisdom in your questions and the views you
expressed; may Allah reward and bless you.

Allah knows best.


Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------

III. ARE PENSION PLANS PERMISSIBLE? AREN’T THEY A


KIND OF INSURANCE?

SUBJECT: Are Pension plans permissible? Aren’t they a kind of insurance?

From: dialogue@islam-online
Date: 3/30/2001
Name of Questioner Youssef Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 3/30/2001 Email
country of Origin Morocco User Ref. No. BK6CBT country of Res. Morocco

Question:
Assalamu Alaykum My question is concerning pension plans, I'm working with a
multinational company and we have a subscription with a private insurance company in
Morocco for an insurance plan and a pension plan. The pension plan is as follow I pay
6% of my monthly salary and the company in which I work 6% to the insurance company
and at the age of 60, I have the right to three options: 1-To get the amount accumulated at
ones 2- to get a monthly amount for 10-15 years 3- to get a certain monthly amount until
the end of your life. The problem is as follow, the amount that I'm paying each month
there is a minimum rate of 4.5% guarantied but the right benefit of each year is calculated
according to the benefits that the insurance company has had each year with this money
and is normally between 6 and 8% per year. I don't have any idea where and how the
insurance company is investing their money and I don't have the possibility to know. Is
this kind of pension plan allowed by Islam or not? Many thanks and God bless you.
Assalamu Alaykum.

My Answer:
Dear Br. Youssef,
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
The actual and the guaranteed rates are interest. In almost all countries, insurance
companies are not allowed to invest the insurance fund in anything other that interest
earning assets. This especially applied to group pension funds. You probably know that
there are life insurance policies available for more that 10 year in the USA that invest the
insurance funds in the stock market, where one can make a selection of funds that have
the least involvement in interest and other prohibited transactions. This is out of the
question at this moment...
Pension plans that come with employment, in the government and big businesses, in
which the employee has no choice of the conditions of the contracts, like this case, were
discussed by the greatest Muslim Scholar of the Twentieth Century, the late Shaikh
Muhammad Abu Zahrah and he argued that they are permissible for a Muslim individual
employee to take them and you don't need to ask about any details of how and why they
invest in a certain manner. If Muslims create a pension plan in company in which they
have a decision power they must formulate it without any interest or any other prohibited
transaction.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
--------------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Beneficiary of Pension

From: Islam on line


Sent: September 29, 2002
Name of Questioner umm j Gender Female Age 31-45
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 9/3/2002 Email
country of Origin South Africa User Ref. No. VVTEU9 country of Res. S. Africa

Question
Assalamu Alaikum I would please like to know what the Shari'ah ruling is on
inheritance if - a divorced man dies - he leaves behind his parents and one son -
he has not left a will - according to the law of the country his son is the
beneficiary of his house and pension fund how would the house and pension
lump sum be allocated according to Shari'ah?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. umm j
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
The Shari'ah rules give the parents one sixth each of the estate, net of debt and funeral
cost (you said there is no will by the deceased).
However for the pension, we have to distinguish between two cases. 1) a residual lump
sum in the Pension Fund that was owned by the deceased in his life (example: the
Individual Retirement Accounts, IRA, in the USA), this must be distributed the same as
mentioned above because it was owned by the deceased in his life, and 2) a lump sum
due by the incidence of death, like we have it in life insurance. This can be distributed to
beneficiaries as per assignment made by the deceased or by the law or system of the
Pension Fund. But if there are no such assignments, they must be distributed according
the inheritance rules mentioned above. The reason for the different treatment is that the
latter was not owned by the deceased and the inheritance applies to the properties the
deceased owned in his/her life.
Note: it is unfortunate that many Muslims who live in countries that have no family and
inheritance laws for Muslims do not take proper precaution to make their estate be
distributed in accordance with the Shari'ah. Please consult www.isna.net or www.kahf.net
for the form of Last Will and Testament that must be signed and readied by all such
Muslims.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------

IV. REINSURANCE, IS IT PERMISSIBLE?

SUBJECT: Is reinsurance of Reciprocal insurance permitted?

In a message dated 8/2/2001


From: dialogue@islam-online
Name of Questioner Mohamud Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 6/26/2001 Email
country of Origin Kenya User Ref. No. WDVKTD country of Res. USA

Question:
Peace of Allah and His Blessings be upon you. We are a group of Muslim families who
want to form a reciprocal (TAKAFUL) fund where if one of the breadwinners died the
rest will pay his/her family $50,000 in order to settle any outstanding debts on the
diseased and $5,000 funeral expenses for each member of the group. In this State of the
United States this is called reciprocal insurance and although it's not required to be
incorporated or licensed the government requires REINSURANCE of the fund to protect
the interest of the members. Our intention of forming this TAKAFUL is to avoid
conventional insurance. Our question is are we sinning to reinsure through commercial
reinsurance if there are no Reinsurance company that adhere to the Islamic law and it is
required by the regulators to either reinsure ourselves for an amount we cannot afford or
through conventional reinsurances.

My Answer:
Dear Br. Mohamud
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Al Hamdu li Allah wa al Salatu wa al Salam ala Rasuli Allah.
The group of Muslim Fuqaha who consider conventional insurance prohibited because of
the Gharar involved accept the cooperative or reciprocal type as an alternative provided
that installments or premiums paid to the cooperative or the reciprocal insurance entity
are given as donations. Their rational is that when you give donations (Tabarru'at) Gharar
is forgiven and in donations one can make certain conditions like the reciprocity
condition. Obviously, such donations cannot be given to a profit motivated company.
This group was faced, in the early stage of insurance entities organized according to its
views, by the same question of reinsurance. The Fatwa of the leading scholar of this
opinion, Shaikh al Siddiq al Darir of Sudan, is that until Islamic reinsurance companies
are established it is permissible to take reinsurance with conventional reinsurance ones
because that is a lesser of an evil. You know that reinsurance is needed by the sound
business practice rule of insurance not necessarily as government requirement. This is the
way all, what is called, the Islamic insurance companies run their business today!

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------------------------

V. TERM AND WHOLE LIFE INSURANCES

SUBJECT: Whole and Term life insurances

From: Islam on line


Sent: March 31, 2002
Name of Questioner Jamal Gender Male Age Above 60
Education Graduate Date Submitted 3/4/2002 Email
country of Origin United States User Ref. No. BV2HIK country of Resi. USA

Question
What are the types of life insurance that are permissible?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Jamal
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Here are shorthand answers without their rationale, as it has become known to the
questioner.
1. Whole Life – a cash value is involved which earns interest: Forbidden, unless the
interest effect, being small and peripheral to the main substance of the contract, can be
isolated and give away to Muslim charities.
2. Term Life – this is pure insurance – no cash value is involved, no interest is earned:
permissible.
3. Variable Life – cash value is involved, but it is invested in stocks only: permissible
provided stocks are selected from among the permissible set of stocks (i. e., generally, not
banking and other interest loaded companies, no armament and military industries, no
other Haram such as breweries and casinos and Hollywood companies, no preferred
stocks, no prohibited derivatives) .
4. Tax deferred variable annuity – the insured’s cash is invested in stocks only; death
benefit guarantees the insured’s beneficiary will receive at least as much as was paid in to
the policy: permissible with the same condition.
5. Health insurance: permissible.
6. Car insurance: permissible .
7. Home insurance: permissible.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-------------------------
Subject: Term life insurance

From: Islam net [mailto:islamonlinenet@hotmail.com]


Sent: December 24, 2002
Name of Questioner ASHRAF Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 11/22/2002 Email
country of Origin Egypt User Ref. No. VB55VZ country of Res. Egypt

Question
Alsalam Alikum, my company offers "Term Life" Life Insurance. I pay $12 monthly, and
in the case of my death I get $200,000. Is this Haram, I read your Fatwa about Life
insurance, but I did not fully understand it. Please advise me.. Gazak Allah Khair

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. ASHRAF
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Term life insurance is permissible. I do go along with the Fatwa of the late Shaikh
Mustafa al Zarka that insurance, offered by commercial or other companies, is
permissible if it is not interest-based. Term life insurance is not interest-based. You can
take it through your employer, as a group, or even individually.
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-----------------------

VI. SIGNING AN INSURANCE CONTRACT AND ESCAPING ITS


IMPLICATIONS

SUBJECT: signing an insurance contract then claiming it is not binding

From: Islam on Line


Sent: March 27, 2002
Name of Questioner Muhammad Gender Male Age15-20
Education Graduate Date Submitted2/27/2002 Email
country of origin Bangladesh User Ref. No. UCVIYI country of Res. UK

Question
Assalamu Alaikum brothers, my question was regarding contracts (insurance). I heard
that during the time of the prophet (saw) his wife Aisha (ra.a) agreed a contract to free a
slave, it turned out that this contract was denying some Islamic principles hence it was an
un-Islamic contract, on meeting the prophet (saw) he told her to ignore the un-Islamic
terms of the contract (as she wasn't bound by it). What i want to know is can this Hadith
be used to justify signing a Insurance contract, because you could sign the contract and
ignore the un-Islamic terms which exist in the contract and hence you wouldn't be bound
by it. If so, can't we then say that Muslims can sign any un-Islamic contract because they
will not be bound by it? Furthermore I've heard people say you can sign a Haram contract
as long as you sign with the intention of attaining the actual paper (of the contract) and
not agreeing to the contract itself, is this correct? Assalamu Alaikum

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Muhammad
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
The Hadith you refer to is (meaning only) 'Aisha, may God be pleased with her, wanted
to buy a slave woman for the purpose of liberating her, the seller insisted on a condition
that contradicts the contract itself (the Wala' relation [ relation of mutual support between
a liberator and the liberated slave] should be to the seller) The prophet, pbuh, told her to
accept and let the purchase go through and such a condition is void because such a
condition puts a limit on the right of owner as it contradicts the implication of the right of
ownership.
The general rules of contracting are expressed in the Qur'an, Verse 5:1 that applies to all
conditions in contracts and the Prophet's saying "Muslims must stand by their
conditions." This means that all conditions must be fulfilled.
Of course it is apparent that when the law itself voids a condition because it contradicts
the nature of the contract such a condition is abolished by law. That was the kind of
condition in the case of 'Aisha, mGbpwh. an example of such conditions: If you sell a car
and make a condition that the buyer must not ride it, or must not sell it or must not travel
in it from London to Birmingham, etc. all such conditions are void by law in the UK and
in USA and in Shari'ah.
That doesn't mean you can sign any condition and claim you are not bound by it. For
Muslims living in countries that do not apply the Shari'ah as its civil law, the law of the
land is binding to them, and they will only fool themselves if they sigh a contract, with a
condition that is in violation of Shari'ah and claim it is not binding on them! If you sign a
contract you will have to fulfill all its conditions unless the other party relieves you of
them and signing a contract that contradicts the Shari'ah put the sin on the Muslim who
signs, no relief from this sin! Finally, beware intentions do not affect contracts if they are
not spelled out in the sections and text of the contract, and there is nothing in Shari'ah
that is called "attaining the paper of the contract."
Finally, to get an insurance contract you have to pay the first premium at least, it will
then be to your disadvantage to consider it not binding if anything happens!

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-------------------------------------

VII. STUDYING INSURANCE AND WORKING IN INSURANCE


COMPANIES

SUBJECT: Working in an insurance company

From: Islam on line


Sent: May 05, 2002
Name of Questioner Sameer Gender Male Age 21-30
Education Graduate Date Submitted 4/21/2002 Email
country of Origin Canada User Ref. No. KSKSL5 country of Res. Canada

Question
Assalamu Alaikum, I have searched your fatwa bank for rulings on insurance in general
and working in them specifically, in the hopes of resolving a major question of mine. I
am near the completion of my university degree and I am intending on working in the
actuarial profession. Actuaries are hired in all types of insurance companies, consulting
companies and pension companies. From what I have researched pension companies
seem to be the area least under dispute. Even so it would be unlikely that upon landing
my first career job, I would find a pension company that is involved in fully Halal
transactions. My questions are as follows. 1) Would it be possible to work as an actuary
in a traditional insurance company, and if not in all then which ones? 2) Would it be
possible to work for a consulting company even if some of its employment comes from
insurance companies and traditional western banks? 3) Is it Halal to work as an actuary in
a pension company? Jazakallah khair.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. Sameer
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Insurance itself is not agreeably prohibited. Great Ulama of the caliber of the late Shaikh
Mustapha al Zarka (died 1999) believed it is permissible if there is no interest clause in
the contract. Actuarial studies are useful for insurance and pensions and they are used all
over the Muslim world. It is just happened that those contemporary Ulama who argued
for its prohibition are not exposed to the needs of contemporary life, in industry, trade,
transportation, urban living, health, and life insurance.
Anyway even those Ulama that believe insurance offered by companies that aim at
making profits, in contrast with mutual or cooperative insurers, do not consider working
in such companies a prohibited action. Shaikh Muhammad al Siddiq al Darir of Sudan, a
leading international Shari'ah scholar against commercial based insurance and obviously
against interest argues that working in interest based bank is permitted as long as one
avoids being a signatory of an interest based contract, its writer or its singing witness.
The matter with insurance companies is the same. It is permissible to work in an
insurance company, for analogy of his opinion, as long as you are not the person who
signs the contract on behalf of the company.
In Brief, I happen to be an admirer of the opinion of Zarka, by the way the late Mawdudi
has similar opinion, and I believe that insurance is permissible as long as it is void of an
interest clause. Working as actuarial in pension companies is permissible, working as
actuarial in insurance companies is also permissible and the income derived from them is
Halal (lawful) InShaAllah,

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------
SUBJECT: Selling life insurance to Muslims in India

From: Islam on line


Sent: August 12, 2002
Name of Questioner gaffoor Gender Male Age 21-30
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 8/2/2002 Email
country of Origin India User Ref. No. RLC6J country of Res. India

Question
assalam mu Alaikum, I just need your advice I am here in India selling insurance
products. Some of my Muslim brothers insult me call my profession Haram they don’t
have the right knowledge on insurance and when i show them they don’t see it also as a
result of this I’m developing a constant hatred to the certain sect of the society for their
ignorance because of them I am not able to focus on my work. Kindly advice ALLAH
HAFIZ

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. gaffoor
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
the opinion “that insurance contracts with regular commercial companies as insurer is
permissible” is strong from the point of view of evidence and general Shari’ah principles,
although it is the minority’s. I personally go along with it with due respect to those
scholars who take the opposite view. There must be no ill feeling because we adopt
different opinions in matters that are not given in the texts of the Qur’an and the Sunnah.
I think insurance is very important in the contemporary life, especially in countries that
do not have the cooperative/contributary kind of insurance. The situation of the Muslims
in India makes insurance rather kind of obligatory for all Muslims on their properties and
their lives too. I believe the benefits of insurance under such cicumstances make it more
important.
Please be patient, brother and try to educate the ignorant among us…

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allahi Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------
SUBJECT: Studying and working as actuarial

From: Islam on line


Sent: August 17, 2002
Name of Questioner Thara Gender Female Age 15-20
Education Date Submitted 7/21/2002 Email
country of Origin United Kingdom User Ref. No. 7QT776 country of Res. UK

Question
Asalam alay kum warahmatulahi wabarakata hu My friend is studying Acturial Sciences
at University as his degree. As far as i understand it, the degree is not Haram itself but he
intends to become an Actuary in the future. Please could you inform me of the ruling
concerning becoming an Actury-Jazaakallahu Kairan

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. Thara
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Studying and working in the area of actuarial science is permissible because he can work
in areas other than commercial insurance companies such as retirement plans and Islamic
insurance, besides working in commercial insurance companies is not forbidden as
insurance contract with them is not forbidden but controversial. There is an important
group of Muslim scholars who believe it is permissible on the ground that it is a new
contract that violates none of the rules of Shari’ah. This group refutes the argument that it
is similar to Interest or it contains an amount of Gharar (ambiguity) that is not telerable in
contracts.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allahi Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------------
SUBJECT: Working in insurance companies on commission

From: Islam on line


Sent: September 06, 2002
Name of Questioner kashif Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 8/20/2002 Email
country of Origin Canada User Ref. No. 8ISSU4 country of Res. Canada

Question
Dear scholars, As-Salaam `Alaykum. I have a question on working with insurance
company. I want to know: is it Haram or Halal, if I work for an insurance company on
commission basis which deals in term life and property insurance. This is self
employment which gives business opportunity your own. But i am confused is it Halal
for me to do this business or not. Please give me straight answer can I do this insurance
business or not. Thank you waiting for your reply

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. kashif
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Working in insurance companies is permissible provided you avoid writing interest based
contracts. Health, property, accident and term life insurances are not interest based. Other
forms of life insurance policies have interest clauses, and for a few of them such a clause
is not central or pivotal to the contract, in some other insurance policies the interest
matter is essential. These must be avoided.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
--------------------------
SUBJECT: Working in an insurance company

From: Islam on line


Sent: December 23, 2002
Name of Questioner MOHD Gender Male Age 15-20
Education Diploma Date Submitted 11/3/2002 Email
country of Origin Pakistan User Ref. No. 1VTM2 country of Res. Pakistan

Question
ASSALAM-O-ALIKUM MY NAME IS M. SIR, I WANT TO TAKE ADVICE ABOUT
AN ISSUE: INSURANCE. INSURANCE OF LIFE IS IT LAWFUL IN ISLAM. MY
BROTHER IS A TRANIEE MANAGER IN AN INSURANCE COMPANY.HE SAID
TO ME THAT IF U WANT TO DO WORK FOR THE SAKE OF EXPERIENCE SO U
R WELCOM. SO I THOUGHT THAT IT IS VERY GOOD OPPARTUNITY FOR ME
TO GET EXPERIENCE AND TO BE INDEPENENT SIR,MY AGE IS 18 AND I
WANT TO DO WORK AND I WANT TO MAKE MY SELF INDEPENDENT. SIR I
DON'T WANT TO DEPEND ON MY FATHER'S MONEY. SIR, I FELT THAT
SOMETIMES MY FATHER FAIL TO MAKE 100% FROM HIS INCOME SO I
THOUGHT THAT IT IS GOOD TO DO JOB AT THIS VERY YOUNG AGE AND
GET SOME PROFESSINAL EXPERIENCE. BUT AS I MENTIONED ABOVE THAT
SOMEBODY TOLD ME THAT "IT IS UNLAWFUL ACCORDING TO THE ISLAM
AND THE WORKERS WHO ARE DOING THIS WORK THEY ARE ALSO
GETTING FORBIDDEN INCOME, AND I DON'T WANT TO START MY JOB
FROM FORBIDDEN MONEY" WHAT I DO IN THIS SITVATION ? PLZ, HELP ME
SIR I WILL BE VERY THANKFUL MAIL ME SOON ALLAH-HAFIZ

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in

Dear Br. MOHD


Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
First, allow me, dear Son, to commend you on the step you are taking to work and earn
your own income. it is an excellent step, but do not let it be a substitute of improving
your skills and abilities by college study and good training because these improvement
add a lot to your potential earnings in the future.
My position on insurance is that I follow the opinion of the late Shaikh Mustafa al Zarka.
Insurance is permitted provided the contract is not interest-based and the insured is a
permitted thing. In application, this means that car, health and hazard insurances are all
permitted; several forms of life insurance contracts are also permitted such as term life
insurance. On the other hand the part of a regular life insurance that is based on interest is
not permitted on the ground that Riba is forbidden. Once it is established that insurance is
permitted working in this field is also permitted.
There two other view on insurance that I have to inform you about although I do not
agree with their arguments. Some people believe that insurance is forbidden whatsoever,
because it is gambling on the Will of God. This is in fact a misunderstanding of insurance
because it has nothing to do with changing the sequence of events, hazards or accidents.
The other view is that insurance is not permitted because its contract normally contains a
certain intolerable degree of ambiguity (called in Islamic Fiqh Gharar). Shaikh Zarka
(who dies in 1999 and was the recognized the most knowledgeable Shari'ah scholar of
our time) argue that the amount of Gharar is in fact tolerable and cites similar precedents
in the classical Fiqh. Those who argue on the basis of Gharar add that if insurance is
reformulated on a cooperative basis, it can become permissible. According to this view
several cooperative Islamic companies were established in several countries. Many
scholars, after studying the experience of these companies go back to the opinion of
Shaikh Zarka because even with a cooperative company, the contractual relationship
between the company and the policy holder is still an exchange contract.
In brief, insurance and working in its field are permitted as long as you avoid interest
transactions.
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------------
SUBJECT: Advising people on choosing best insurance

From: Fatwa E [mailto:fatwae@islam-online.net]


Sent: January 02, 2003
Name of Questioner Khwaja Gender Male Age 46-60
Education Graduate Date Submitted 11/20/2002 Email
country of Origin Pakistan User Ref. No. I95D3 country of Res. Canada

Question
Assalamu Alaikum, May Allah bless you your efforts and time. I have an opportunity to
improve my financial situation by getting involved with Primerica a Financial Services
company. I have 7 kids, wife doesn’t work, can not work, going in debt very fast, my
landlord has asked me to leave the apartment because he wants to sell it, mortgage is
Haram, no one would give me a rental property because of family size, only way is to
make enough money to buy a house in cash. In this financial service business we advice
people on how to reduce debt by offering better products which includes loans and
insurance policies with lower interest rates. I can build my own business and make very
good money in commission at the same time helping families get rid of or reduce their
debt. In a regular job I will never have enough to make ends meet and I will pay more
and more interest until I go bankrupt. This society is not for single earner families. I
avoided credit based on Riba for 4 years after I came here but finally the system caught
up with me. I hate it but I am stuck init. I have a full time job that pays half of my
expenses the other half is increasing by debt monthly. I have tried to get a second job and
every other thing and I don’t get a response from anyone. Is this business Halal or it is
Haram for me to do this business to rid myself of Riba forever. Once I have paid my debt
and bought a house I would do some trading business without any involvement of Riba. I
won’t be taking Riba but I will be advising families on how to reduce it which is good in
itself. I desperately need your advice on this one I would appreciate if you do not
publicize my letter so openly because community will immediately know it is me, I am a
well know College Professor and actively involved in community and Daawa activities.
Not many people are in my situation in this community. So I am very recognizable. My

Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Khwaja
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Advising persons, who are already under interest-based contractual obligations on how to
reduce their interest is not bad at all; it is rather good, more good if these persons are
Muslims because you would helping them reduce their involvement in sin. You must not
write or sign the new reduced-interest contracts, because it is forbidden. Also helping
people in insurance is permissible as most kinds of insurance are permissible and several
contractual forms of life insurance are also non-interest based. I am afraid you may be
expecting rather too much from this proposed new venture and it may end up not giving
you what you expect.
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
----------------------------
SUBJECT: Working as Actuary

From: Islam on line


Sent: February 26, 2003
Name of Questioner omar Gender Male Age 15-20
Education High School and Below Date Submitted 2/18/2003 Email
country of Origin Pakistan User Ref. No. 7FJCZU country of Res. Pakistan
Question
Is the job of an actuary who mainly calculates insurance premiums Haram in Islam?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. omar
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
No. Working as actuary is permissible because it is useful and the concept of insurance is
not forbidden. In addition to insurance companies it is used in retirement programs,
providence funds and social security system.
Additionally working as actuary in an insurance company is not forbidden either because
insurance is controversial. there are great scholars (and probably the wiser ones!) who
argue that insurance is permissible even when it is run on profit making basis, i.e, not
only the mutual or cooperative type of insurance that is agreeably permissible.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
------------------------------

VIII. ACCEPTING INSURANCE PROCEEDS

SUBJECT: Accepting insurance proceeds from a contract bought by employer

From: Islam on line


Sent: May 11, 2002
Name of Questioner Mohammed Gender Male Age 21-30
Education Graduate Date Submitted 4/20/2002 Email
country of Origin India User Ref. No. 9K7WXM country of Res. India

Question
One of my friends had died by accident from UAE while he was working on his
company. Company has taken Life insurance for him according to law of U.A.E. This
insurance amount is already sanctioned. But our problem is this money is Haram or Halal
and His family also very poor and having children and wife too. We asked so many
scholars and they recommended to Ask you about this subject. I am expecting your
response on this matter with Islamic view as soon as possible.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. Mohammed
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Life insurance with commercial (i. e., other than mutual or cooperative) companies is
controversial. Some Ulama believes it is Halal and others believe it is Haram. I happened
to side of those who consider it permissible, hence my opinion is that the amount of
insurance paid to the beneficiaries upon death of the insured is Halal InShaAllah.
BUT your question is not about life insurance, though it seems like that, because the
deceased did not buy a life insurance and did not pay for it. I will rephrase your question
as follows: some dies, and according to government regulation the employer was required
to arrange that certain amount be paid to the deceased's family, regardless poor or rich, is
that amount permissible. The answer is certainly positive, Yes it is permissible and it is
non of the business of the beneficiary to question who actually paid it and by virtue of
what kind of contract it is paid.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------
SUBJECT: Proceeds of life insurance of deceased mother

From: Islam on line


Sent: June 19, 2002
Name of Questioner Gender Age
Education Date Submitted 6/7/2002 Email
country of Origin User Ref. No. MBXA41 country of Res.

Question
My mother recently died, but she had taken out a life insurance policy. I am the sole
beneficary and at the age of 17 years, I need the money. Am I allowed to take the money?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br./Sr.
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
First may God shower mecry to the soul of your mother and give her blessing.
In my opinion life insurance is permissible if it is not interest-based. Interst accumulates
in life insurance if the insured collects its value and it has interest within the collected
value. As a beneficiary, if you collect the amount of the policy (its face value) that is the
amount of insurance , it has no interest if you collect more than the face value, it may
have interest, it depends on the moe of investment in the insurance agreement. In the
latter case you need to isolate the interest amount and donate it to a Muslim charity and
the rest is Halal InShaAllah.
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-----------
SUBJECT: Receiving injury compensation from an insurance company

From: Islam on line


Sent: December 21, 2002
Name of Questioner amal Gender Age
Education Date Submitted 12/17/2002 Email
country of Origin User Ref. No. TC9V39 country of Residence

Question
salam alakum I need some light on my question: I recently got into a car accident. And
alhamdulilah I was not seriously injured. I do have to see the doctor every so often and I
have started physiotherapy. My question is: Is it Haram if i go after the insurance
company (suing them) for the accident? To me if they gave me all the money in the world
it would not bring my health to the way it was. Others tell me to sue them and give the
money to the mosque or to the poor. What do u think is the right thing to do.?

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. Amal
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
if the accident was not your fault, suing the injurer and the injurer guarantor (his/her
insurance company) is certainly your right that you need not forsake and any amount you
collect is a compensation of the injury you sustained, you need not give it to a mosque
unless you want to make a voluntary charity. According to Shari'ah, an injured has a right
to be compensated by the injurer, and if an insurance company, on the injurer's
behalf, makes payment is well and good and the kind of relationship between the injurer
and his insurance company is none of your business, you are not the one who contracted
the insurance company anyway.
If it is your fault and a smart lawyer can switch it on the other party, it is certainly
forbidden to get the money and to contract such a lawyer. This is taking properties of
others in vain.
If it is your fault and you are compensated by your own insurance company, you are the
one who contracted the insurance and you should have asked your question before you
contracted the insurance company.
In my opinion, car, accidents and hazards insurances are permissible with no reservation
that affects your question. If the contract is permissible, getting a compensation from the
insurance company according to this contract is also permissible.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-------------------------------------
SUBJECT: Being a beneficiary to a Riba-based life insurance

From: islamonlinenet@hotmail.com
Sent: January 18, 2003
Name of Questioner Asma Gender Female Age
Education Date Submitted 12/23/2002 Email
country of Origin United States User Ref. No. CB3T1C country of Residence

Question
Asalaam-o-Alaikum, I have a question about Life Insurance and I have gone through
your previous answers on it but I'm not clear about what does the late Shaikh Mustafa al
Zarka's fatwa means. This person is Christian and I am the beneficiary on his Life
Insurance and I and my family are Muslims. The life insurance company has given him
an option of taking half the money instead of the full amount after a certain time if he
does not want to wait till the contract materializes which is his death. Now is it legal as a
beneficiary to take that money and use it on my family as me and my husband both are
unable to find a job and we also have 3 children. Of course we will also give some of it to
charity.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Asma
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Let me please try to make three points clear, those that your question statement raise:
1- To be a beneficiary on a life insurance of any person, Muslim or non Muslim is
permissible, the money you get is pure (Halal). You did not make the life insurance any
way. This is different from entering in a life insurance contract with a company whether
you are the insured or not. Regardless of its origin and the contractual relationships that
generate it, the money you get as a beneficiary is just money due to you by law from
certain company, is there any thing forbidden in taking it? Certainly none.
2- Whether you donate to charity from any money you get is your decision and you are
certainly free to do it or not at any time.
3- The Fatwa of the late Shaikh Zarka: he argued that all kinds of insurance contracts,
including life, are permissible because insurance is a new thing that did not exist at the
time of revelation, it is useful, and it fulfills a very important need that came about with
changing life style, and finally it does not violate or contradict any text or rules of the
Shari'ah. He sharply criticized the claims that insurance is Riba-based or gambling-based.
He further argued that whatever amount of ambiguity it contains (with regard to the due
date of payment and some times number of installments) is tolerable especially that it is
of the kind that does not cause disputes. Ambiguity that causes disputes is not permitted.
He made two conditions: that the contract must not include any interest (Riba) clause or
component and that the subject of insurance should be permissible, i.e., you cannot insure
a shipment of liquor, or the legs of a dancer in a night club (the latter is his exact
example) because both are prohibited, but certainly you can insure the fingers of
a computer terminal user, because this is a permissible job.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
--------------------------
SUBJECT: Receiving payments for medical insurance

From: islamonlinenet@hotmail.com
Sent: January 19, 2003
Name of Questioner Oum Khaled Gender F Age 21-30
Education Date Submitted 12/25/2002 Email
country of Origin User Ref. No. E5BP1H country of Residence

Question
Assalam alaikoum Please try to answer to my question ASAP because I’m continuously
thinking about it My question is about medical insurance. I’m working on a private
enterprise and all the employees salaries are decreased by a certain amount called
“medical insurance”. Our enterprise has signed a contract with an insurance society wich
is private and not belonging to the state. This contract assumes to return to us 80% of all
our medical bills for example if I’m ill and go to a doctor and pay him 20 Euro they will
return to me 16 Euro. I have also the possibility to add my husband and my kids to this
contract with not paying an additional amount and they will benefit from the same
service. Is that “Halal”? I heard that I can benefit from those returning but with not
exceeding the amount that I gave from my salary Jazakoum Allah Khayran

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. Oum Khaled
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Medical insurance is permissible and you can certainly take the 80% of your medical
expenses returned back to you from the insurance company. There is nothing forbidden in
medical insurance. This is the opinion of scholars who studied and understood it. There
are other views mainly from traditional scholars who did not study such contracts in
detail.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-------------------------
SUBJECT: Beneficiary’s proceeds from life insurance

From: LatinoDawahNY@aol.com
Sent: March 15, 2003

Question
Salaam alaikum, Jazakallah for taking your time to answer this question. My non-
Muslim father recently passed away. He had a life insurance policy. I wanted to know if
it is permissible for me to accept my share of this inheritance. Specifically I have done
some research and found that scholars have conflicting answers with regard to the
permissibility of Muslims having their own life insurance policies. However, in this
particular case the amount left to me is a gift (inheritance), not something that I have paid
any money or interest into (if that makes sense). Does that have any bearing on its
permissibility? That is, if it is a gift am I obligated to question it?
Thank you for your time, Salaam. Sr. Samantha

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in

Dear Sr. Samantha


Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
In your kind question you actually raised four issues: life insurance, inheritance between
Muslims and non-Muslims, is the proceeds of life insurance an inheritance? and gifts
between non-Muslims and Muslims. I will try to give brief answers to all of them.
1 - Life insurance, and all forms of insurance too, is controversial. Almost all Fuqaha
who argue against it have very little experience of life in Western countries and cannot
imagine how useful it is, rather important, insurance in general and life insurance, in
specific, is. Those who have some experience or knowledge about live in the industrial
countries all almost all for the permissibility of insurance of all kinds. I believe it is
permissible. The main evidence is its usefulness while it does not violate any of the
objective or specific texts of Shari'ah, there are similar examples in known permissible
contract such as the contract to guarantee ravel road safety and the 'Aqila system for
payment of compensation of injuries inflicted without any criminal intention, it is not
based on interest (as the nature of contract, although many life insurance contracts have
interest clauses and such clauses are certainly prohibited, the thing that makes certain
kinds of life insurance prohibited), it is not based on gambling, and the amount of
ambiguity in the contract is within Shari'ah tolerable level). I believe that it is permissible
for Muslims to take certain kinds of life insurance contracts. This contract was taken by a
non-Muslim who is certainly not required to follow the rulings of Shari'ah because he is
first asked to accept the truth of the Oneness of God and the Prophethood of Muhammad,
pbuh. Consequently this discussion is in reference to your reading on insurance.
2 - Inheritance between Muslims and non-Muslims is not permissible, two ways. there
are several Sayings against it and this is the view of the four schools of Fiqh. there is a
minority opinion in the Malikite school that this prohibition is only one way, and that
Muslims may inherit from non-Muslims. The Sayings about the inheritance of Saad, the
companion, from his father (the Prophet prevented him to take any share and left all the
estate to his non-Muslim brother) stand against this. Beside this opinion is discriminatory
and seems to be against the justice spirit of Islam.
BUT what is at stake doesn't have to be understood as inheritance. If a non-Muslim dies
and is survived by a Muslim close relative. The deceased either had a Last Will or not. If
the deceased had a Last Will distribution is done by virtue of this Will, this is not
inheritance according to Shari'ah, therefore by virtue of a Last Will of a non-Muslim it is
permissible to a Muslim to take what is assigned to her/him in the Will regardless of its
percentage to the total amount of estate. Please notice here that non-Muslims are not
required to limit distribution through a Last Will to only one third because this
requirement is again a Shari'ah ruling that doesn't apply to non-Muslims.
If the deceased did not leave a Last Will, the state Law decrees the distribution,
regardless of what is it called in the state Laws, this is a giving by virtue of the law, why
should we call it inheritance in Islam. It is not inheritance and it does not apply the rules
of inheritance that are known in Islam. IT IS A DISTRIBUTION BY VIRTUE OF THE
LAW regardless of what triggers the Law to do it (for instance, Canada distribute a
certain acreage to people who migrate to northern Alberta, is this an inheritance from the
state?). It is permissible to take this distribution regardless of what it is called in the state
Laws.
For Muslims in America, the only way to enforce the Islamic inheritance Law is through
Willed distribution (by a Last Will or better a Revocable Living Trust) In such a Will
Muslims are prohibited to give any share to non-Muslim relatives (including non-Muslim
wife) except through the one third that is assigned to non-heirs and permitted to be given
to non-Muslims and to institutions and for distribution to the poor and needy through a
Trustee.
3 - Is life insurance proceeds an inheritance? The argument against it is strong. because
only the Tarikah (estate) can be inherited. But the Tarikah has a specific meaning in
Islamic Fiqh: it is all properties that the deceased owned. It is then not necessarily equal
the state laws' definition of "estate." In fact according to some states, I know it is in
California, insurance proceeds can be left outside the estate by assigning a beneficiary or
a trustee for the proceeds, consequently insurance proceeds go the beneficiaries or trustee
tax free. INSURANCE PROCEEDS WERE NOT OWNED BY THE DECEASED
BECAUSE THEY ONLY EXIST AFTER DEATH and upon presentation of a death
certificate. If they were not owned by the deceased, it is then permissible for the owner of
the insurance policy to name any beneficiary(ies) and the distribution of the proceeds
doesn't have to follow the rules of inheritance. We have similar case in the Shari'ah that is
the case of Family Waqf. You make a deed of a family Waqf and the distribution of its
revenues and its assets, if the Waqf is made for a given period, doesn't have to follow the
same shares of inheritance. SINCE THE PROCEEDS OF THE LIFE INSURANCE OF
YOUR DECEASED FATHER IS NOT INHERITANCE ANYWAY, WHY WORRY
ABOUT INHERITANCE BETWEEN MUSLIMS AND NON-MUSLIMS?

4 - Gifts are certainly permitted between Muslims and non-Muslims, no limits what so
ever. There are many reports that the Prophet, pbuh, has done that several times: giving
gifts to non-Muslims and accepting gifts from non-Muslims.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf

SUBJECT: Interest component of proceeds of life insurance - Continue

From: Monzer Kahf


Sent: Sunday, March 16, 2003
To: LatinoDawahNY@aol.com

Question
Thank you again for your most gracious and timely response to my question. If I may
bother you yet again to just clarify some of the points you made. You stated that
insurance that is not interest based is acceptable for Muslims. You also made a point that
since my father was a non-Muslim he was not required to follow the rulings of Shari'ah.
In addition you made it clear that life insurance is not exactly (according to Shari’ah) an
inheritance. Therefore, I ascertain that you would call the amount left to me a gift. I
understand that gifts can be accepted from non-Muslims. However, if the insurance is
interest-based...am I only entitled to the portion of the gift that was not part of that
interest or am I entitled to the entire amount regardless of its interest. This is the part I
am unclear about.

I understand that life insurance is not an inheritance now and I greatly appreciate your
time and effort. i just want to be certain that since it is a gift I needn't worry about the
specifics of where it came from . Jazakallahu khair, Samantha

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. Samantha
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
First, you are correct in summarizing the points.
The part you are sure is interest you should take it and give to Muslim charity; do not
leave it to the insurance company. However, an interest component cannot, normally, be
part of the face value of the policy that is due upon death, it may only be part from the
added amounts above the face value of the policy because some life insurance contracts
give you an added amount, if the premiums paid were more than needed for the risk
element required to maintain the face value of the policy. What I mean to say is that in
most insurance policies there is no interest component in face value of the policy that is
due upon death, while there is an interest component if an amount is paid to the insured
after 20 years should he/she not die during this period.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-------------------------------------------

IX. IN LEASING WHO PAYS FOR INSURANCE?

SUBJECT: Insurance of leased cars

From: Islam on line


Sent: May 31, 2002
Name of Questioner mahdi Gender Male Age 21-30
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 5/6/2002 Email
country of Origin Morocco User Ref. No. BLW3S8 country of Res. Morocco

Question
assalamou aalaykou wa rahmato allah i want to ask you about leasing to particulars, i
intend to buy a car this way, the car would be registered with my name, and i should take
care if it as if it would be mine, including insurance. so please, is this kind of leasing
allowed by Shari’ah? Thank you very much and salamou aalaikoum.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
Wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi
Ajma'in
Dear Br. mahdi
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
In leasing, the owner/lessor is always responsible to make the car available to the
user/lessee in working conditions. This means that insurance, taxes and basic
maintenance must be in principle the responsibility of the owner/lessor.
However, in leasing the two parties can determine the rental amount any way they
choose, the rental may be in money e.g., a given monthly payment for certain number of
months or a down payment at the date of the contract plus a monthly amount, and it can
be a service such as you provide me with the insurance service according to certain
known specifications, or a combination of both. The reason is that in Shari’ah the rental
amount must be known at the time of contract, and as long as it is known, it can be in
kind (a commodity or a service) or in money.
Insurance can normally cover essential maintenance, not related to operation, i.e., all the
maintenance responsibility of the owner/lessor. Further a great part of the insurance in
cars relates to the user/operator and her/his style of driving etc.
The important result of this discussion is that in a leasing agreement insurance service
and a down payment and a monthly payment for a given number of months can be
combined together as being the rental amount. Hence, in my opinion insurance and taxes
can be on the lessee provided this is mentioned in the contract of leasing the car.
The only remaining little issue is: are you sure the title of ownership of the car is going to
be in your name and why? Because normally in car leasing, you are responsible for
insurance and maintenance (usually the car is still under warranty from the manufacturer)
but the title remains in the name of the lessor, this is the only security the lessor has
against you. How come the lessors in Morocco give you the title? You may have
mistaken the appearance of your name on the title as a user/lessee with having the title in
your name!
Wa Allahu A'lam
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
------------------------
SUBJECT: In Equipment Leasing, who should pay for insurance?

From: Islam on line


Sent: December 17, 2002
Name of Questioner Atif Gender Male Age 31-45
Education Graduate Date Submitted 11/27/2002 Email
country of Origin Pakistan User Ref. No. 4YBQHG country of Res. Pakistan

Question
Is Leasing allowed in Islam? I am willing to get some equipment for my factory on the
terms of leasing. That is on rental basis. I have to pay a deposit of approx. 15% of the
equipment value and then start paying rent for a period of 36 months. I will end up
paying more money than it is actual value, but in installments. At the end of leasing
period I will purchase the equipment from the leasing company on the residual value
(usually the amount I paid as deposit). Thanks for your kind elaboration. Jazakallah

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Atif
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Leasing in general is permissible. The essence of the prohibition of interest is not the
fixation but the fact that interest is an increment in a loan. Physical assets can be leased at
fixed rent for short and long periods of time, and they can be leased with purchase too.
In leasing, however, major maintenance, taxes on the assets and insurance are all the
liability of the owner not the lessee. But any such liability can be added to the rent (i.e.,
made a liability of the lessee) if its amount is known at the time of the contract. A major
and very important condition in leasing is that the amount of rent and its due date must be
known and determined in the contract.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-------------------------------

X. INTEREST-BASED LIFE INSURANCE

SUBJECT: Interest-based life insurance

From: islamonlinenet@hotmail.com
Sent: January 19, 2003
Name of Questioner Emira Gender Age
Education Date Submitted 12/24/2002 Email
country of Origin User Ref. No. C95GVG country of Residence

Question
Numerous western insurance companies offer attractive pension schemes whereby the
client pays a certain amount of money annually, only to have the double of what he has
invested returned to him in 25 years. I have inquired about the ways in which such firms
multiply clients' resources, and have been told that they deal in safe investments such as
real estate, infrastructure, etc. They also give loans to governments, but not to
individuals. Would participating in such a pension scheme be Halal, and if not, what are
the Islamic alternatives for securing one's retirement? Thank you.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. Emira
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
It seems that this is an interest-based insurance contract because it guarantees a given
amount at the end of the contract. But I need more details before I give definite opinion
on this contract.
Although I go with the view that accepts insurance if it is not interest-based, I have doubt
about this arrangement. I will need from you either the exact basic features, i.e.,
obligations of the two parties or a copy of the whole document.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------
SUBJECT: Interest-based life insurance

From: fatwae [mailto:fatwae@islam-online.net]


Sent: January 22, 2003
Name of Questioner shalimar Gender Female Age 31-45
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 12/26/2002 Email
country of Origin Egypt User Ref. No. FEDC63 country of Res. Canada

Question
Is life insurance in Egypt is Haram if we pay 100L.E every month for 20 years. If some
thing happened with in 20 years we will take them 25,000 if not we will take them
75,000. Is it Haram or Halal? It is a contract

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Sr. shalimar
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
Insurance is in my opinion permitted if it is not mingled with interest. A life insurance
contract that gives a definite amount after a number of years, if the insured survives, is
interest based because this amount is equal to the part of the premium that is called
investment premium placed at a given interest rate. This kind of life insurance is not
permitted in the Shari'ah.

Wa Allahu A'lam
Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin
Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
---------------------------

XI. ARGUING THE OPPONENTS OF INSURANCE

SUBJECT: Objections to Insurance


From: Islam on line
Sent: March 05, 2003
Name of Questioner yasir Gender Male Age
Education Post Graduate Date Submitted 2/27/2003 Email
country of Origin User Ref. No. IPJMCV country of Residence

Question
Assalamu Alaikum, People have told me that insurance on anything is Haram. One of
their reasons is that it interferes with the will of Allah (SWT), but obviously nothing can
interfere with the will of Allah (SWT). Also as one of their reasons, they say that it is
comparable to gambling and Riba. But in gambling there is a chance in loosing ones
money where the sole intention is enjoyment and the chances of gaining money. In
Insurance, if an event does occur, you are guaranteed the reparations. As for being
compared to Riba, when one pays for insurance, we are not investing money for the sole
purpose of gaining money, but to safeguard our loved ones and property. Please shed
some light on this issue. JazaakumAllahu Khair.

My Answer:
Bismi Allah al Rahman al Rahim
Al Hamdu li Allah Rabb al 'Alamin
wa al Salatu wa al Salamu 'ala Sayyidina Muhammad wa 'Ala 'Alihi wa Ashabihi Ajma'in
Dear Br. Yasir
Assalamu Alaykum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuh.
You did an excellent job in clarifying the differences, I will only add footnotes.
Those who claimed insurance interferes with the will of God did not understand
insurance. It remedies some of the financial effects on an event or a hazard. This kind of
misunderstanding is old and was answered by Umar bin al Khattab that "we escape from
the will of God to the will of God"
Objection on the basis of gambling and Riba are also dismissed. However, the claim of
Riba involvement is based on an illusionary exchange of money (the premium) for
money (the payment) at a later date. But also the fact of the insurance contract is that it is
an exchange of money for assurance of financial safeguard should a hazard happens.
Insurance does not have an exchange of money for money unless in some forms of life
insurance where part of the premium is placed at a certain rate of interest and
accumulates to a certain amount payable at a future date. This kind of insurance is
forbidden because of this Riba-based part. The claim of gambling is also refuted because
the essence of gambling is Abath (vanity) i.e., you redistribute wealth on the basis of
rolling a wheel of tossing a dice. Insurance is a very useful contract, especially in an age
that has machines running in street, in air and on water, it is an age full with potential
hazards.
The serious objection to insurance came from Gharar (ambiguity regarding essentials of a
contract). Although insurance contracts are very clear and specific about describing the
events that may invoke the responsibility of the insurer and about the size of extent of this
responsibility, the contract cannot determine the date when it is due nor whether it going
to be invoked to begin with. In other words, the contract cannot determine when a hazard
happens or the extent of the hazard (what sickness and how much it takes to cure, or the
time when a fire happens and the extent of the damage, etc). Additionally, many
insurance contracts cannot determine how many premiums the insured is going to pay,
this is also Gharar. This Gharar on both sides of the insurance contract is essential in any
and all insurances. Here we have two positions of most contemporary Shari'ah scholars.
A group argues that since Gharar is essential in insurance we need to find out if insurance
can be made where such Gharar is permissible. This group suggest that if insurance is
structured as a cooperative or mutual insurance, the Gharar becomes permissible
provided the premium is paid on the basis of contribution (Tabarru') because Gharar is
not permissible in exchange contracts while in contracts that are based on Tabarru' it is
permissible because Tabarru' is only a giving from one side to another. They continue
that in Tabarru' you may stipulate certain conditions that may benefit you. For instance,
Uthman bin Affan made a Waqf (Tabarru') of the Well in Madinah and he made a
condition that he can get water from it like any other Muslim household. This Group
suggest that whence insurance is restructured on the basis of cooperation/mutuality and
Tabarru' the Gharar can be overlooked/tolerated (notice, that it is certainly not eliminated
nor reduced) because Gharar is tolerated on contracts based on Tabarru' and conditions
are permissible too. This is the foundation of what is called the Islamic insurance.
The late Shaikh (died July 1999) argue that we don't need this route because of the
following:
1- The amount of Gharar in insurance is not big to the extent that line up people on the
doors of courts, it is tolerable and he gave many examples from Shari'ah approved
ancient contract such as contract of road safety (you take this road for your caravan and I
guarantee you for its safety. Notice it is almost the same insurance contract).
2- The condition in a Tabarru'-based insurance makes the contract an exchange contract
between the cooperative and any member, so you go back to Gharar in exchange.
3- The contact is very useful rather it is necessary in our age.
4- The insurance contract is in fact based on cooperation because it can only work if you
can recruit for it a large number of insured (policy holders) because its actuarial system
only works on large numbers, therefore, if it can be taken as a cooperative what is the
harm in someone bringing these too many people together and making this her/his
business to make profit, it is still cooperative in essence.
5- People in each age and time invent contracts that suit them and rule is if there is no
violation of any Shari'ah axiom such new contract must be acceptable. In the past people
invented a system of 'Aqilah (if someone hurts another unintentionally the financial
compensation that should be paid to the injured must be collected from all male relatives
(in the whole clan) of the injurer. Now people invented insurance for their needs and it
violates no principle of the Shari'ah.

Wa Alhamdu li Allah Rabbi al 'Alamin


Wassalam
Sincerely,
Dr. Monzer Kahf
-----------------------------------

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen